Katherine Anne Porter

(May 15, 1890September 18, 1980)

The Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and short story writer, Katherine Anne Porter, briefly lived in the DC area in the 1940s and then again from 1959 until her death in 1980.

Porter began writing in 1915, while spending two years in a tuberculosis sanatorium (where she was mistakenly sent while suffering from bronchitis). In 1919, she moved to Greenwich Village, where she became a radical, and befriended several prominent leftists. In 1945, she was appointed to a seven-month Fellowship of Regional American Literature at the Library of Congress. Between 1948 and 1958, she taught at universities, including Stanford, the University of Michigan, and Washington and Lee. She won the Pulitzer Prize in Literature in 1966.

Porter is the author of one novel, Ship of Fools (1962), three novellas, including Pale Horse, Pale Rider (1939), and three collections of short fiction, including Flowering Judas (1930), and The Collected Stories (1965).

The Porter Room at McKeldin Library, part of the special collections of the University of Maryland, contains Porter’s personal collection of books, plus an oil portrait of the author and select personal belongings. The University also hosts the Katherine Anne Porter Society.

The Homes

3106 P St. NW, Washington, DC

Located in Georgetown neighborhood, Northwest- West of Rock Creek

3601 49th St. NW, Washington, DC

Located in American University neighborhood, Northwest- West of Rock Creek

3112 Q St. NW, Washington, DC

Located in Georgetown neighborhood, Northwest- West of Rock Creek

Katherine Anne Porter

3106 P St. NW, Washington, DC
Located in Georgetown neighborhood, Northwest- West of Rock Creek

Katherine Anne Porter

3601 49th St. NW, Washington DC
Located in American University neighborhood, Northwest- West of Rock Creek

Katherine Anne Porter

3112 Q St. NW
Located in Georgetown neighborhood, Northwest- West of Rock Creek